REG1A and EXTL3 genes are overexpressed in colorectal tumors of patients who are at high risk of recurrence

According to a new study from the Max Delbrueck Center in Berlin, Germany, two genes, known as REG1A and EXTL3, are overexpressed in colorectal tumors of patients who are at high risk of recurrence.

REG1A expression was also significantly higher in surgical biopsies taken from pre-cancerous colon polyps, or adenomas according to the study.

“The findings suggest that the two genes are significant prognostic markers and may eventually help in making decisions about management of colorectal adenomas and tumors,” said principal investigator Wolfgang Kemmner, Ph.D., who is Surgical Oncology Research Group Leader at the Max Delbrueck Center.

Results were presented at the first meeting on Molecular Diagnostics in Cancer Therapeutic Development, organized by the American Association for Cancer Research.

The researchers analyzed tumor and normal tissue from 75 colorectal cancer patients who had undergone surgery but not yet received any other treatment. They discovered that Regenerating Islet-Derived 1 Alpha was overexpressed in tumor specimens compared to normal tissue. In general, its level of expression correlated with the length of time before the disease recurred, as REG1A expression levels increased, disease-free survival decreased.

Patients with higher expression levels also tended to have lower disease-specific survival, meaning less time before they died from their disease. In addition, REG1A expression was significantly higher in tumors with peritoneal carcinomatosis, a type of advanced cancer in which many small tumors develop on the abdominal cavity and linings.

The other gene, Exostoses (Multiple)-Like 3, which was examined in samples of 56 patients, also tended to be upregulated in peritoneal carcinomatosis and was a significant predictor of patient outcome. EXTL3 encodes the receptor to which the REG1A protein binds.

Taken together, the findings raise the possibility that the genes could help guide decisions regarding both treatment and prevention of the disease.

“On the one hand, determining REG1A and EXTL3 expression levels could eventually help show which surgical patients are at high risk for recurrence and thus need more aggressive treatment,” Kemmner said. “In addition, REG1A expression may serve in molecular diagnosis of very early tumors not yet apparent from conventional histopathology.”